MATERIA MEDICA OF THE ANCIENT CHINESE. 149 
VI, 108: certe diversa]. Sinice yin chin hao. Habitat 
incultum, cultumque in Cochinchina, China. 
Tatar., Cat., 30 :—Yin ch‘en hao. Flores Artemisia.— 
P. Smrrg, 25 :—Ape. abrotanum. 
Cust. Med., p. 74 (112) :— Yin ch‘en exported 1885 from 
Han kow 135 piculs,—p. 90 (52), from Kiu kiang 103 
Piculs,—p. 126 (99), from Chin kiang 1.7 picul,—p. 324 
(145), from Swatow 3 piculs,—p. 30 (107), from Tien tsin 
a small quantity. ' 
Amon. exot., 897 :—PY PR intsjin, vulgo fki jamogi § 
kawara jamogi. Abrotanum campestre. Tura. [Fl jap., 309] 
refers this to his Artemisia capillaris (with capillary leaves).— 
So moku, XVI, 28:—Same Chinese name A. capillaris. 
14.—35 EE ts‘ing hao. P., XV, 16. T., LXII. 
Pen king:—Ts‘ing hao (green Artemisia), BE | ts‘ao 
(herbaceous) hao, Fi} fang hui. Leaves, stem, root and 
seed used in medicine. ‘Taste bitter. Nature cold. Non- 
Poisonous. 
For other ancient names see Bot. sin., II, 13. 
Pie lu:—The ts‘ao hao grows in the marshes of Hua yin 
[in Shen si, App. 87]. 
Tao Hune-xing:—This is a common plant, now 
Senerally called ts‘ing hao. The people eat it mixed with 
fragrant vegetables. 
Hawn Pao-sHeng [10th cent.]:—The ts‘ao hao in Kiang 
tung [ App. 124] is called 3Q | sin hao, for its smell 
resembles that of the beast called sin. In the north it is 
called ts‘ing hao. The young leaves are pickled in vinegar. 
The leaves resemble those of the yin ch‘en [see 73] but are 
not white underneath [whence the name ¢s‘ing or green hao}. 
‘The plant grows more than four fect high. The leaves are 
